- Date: 07/30/2003
- Format: Print Paperback
- Price: $54.00
- ISBN: 978-1-56802-749-4
- Pages: 244
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Global Environmental Politics: Power, Perspectives, and Practice Ronnie D. Lipschutz, University of California, Santa Cruz
Traditional views of global environmental politics take the structures and relations of international politics as a given. Solutions to environmental problems, then, must be products of concession, negotiation, and inevitable compromise—a world of top-down planetary management. Lipschutz challenges students to question these conventional approaches. He argues that much light can be shed on global environmental degradation if we look beyond the politics of conflict and cooperation and explore environmental problems from their very "roots." Using a framework that accounts for the ontologies, material conditions, and power relations that structure global environmental problems, Lipschutz is able to more effectively question attempts to clean up the globe and sustain the world's natural resources. Throughout the text, the author uses compelling cases to illustrate the effects of globalization and capitalism, yet is careful to make the link between the local and the global to show how we, as individuals, are both consumers of goods and producers of pollution. A powerful new approach - How is the financing of a water system in Bolivia linked to long-standing forestation practices in India?
Taking nothing for granted, the root causes of major global environmental problems are exposed and subjected to rigorous analysis. Lipschutz shows, for instance, how privatization operates in different global contexts with strikingly similar consequences.
- In what ways are liberalism and realism actually two sides of the same coin?
Both make self-interest—of the individual and of the state—key operating terms. In a revealing comparison, Lipschutz explores the limits of these dominant political models to effectively frame and solve environmental problems.
- What kinds of political, social, and environmental practices bring about meaningful change?
By emphasizing the global impacts of local actions, the text shows how attempts to control environmental problems may actually reproduce the very systems they are meant to ameliorate.
Combined with practical pedagogy - Rich historical background helps contextualize contemporary issues.
- Extensive suggested reading lists at the end of each chapter guide students to further research, while tables and figures elegantly show data and concepts.
- The emphasis on assessing the root causes of global environmental problems and models encourages critical thinking. Students are also encouraged to rethink their own role in the global environmental system and to get involved in effective forms of social change.
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Table of Contents Chapter 1. What Are “Global Environmental Politics?”
Bananas Thinking about Bananas and Other Such Things Thinking Socially The Many Roles of Nature Institutions for the Earth? What’s in the Rest of this Book? Our Home Is Our Habitat, Our Habitat Is Our Home For Further Reading Chapter 2. “Global Environment”
Thinking Green Philosophy, Ontology, Epistemology Deconstructing Environmental Philosophies Thinking Ahead For Further Reading Chapter 3. Capitalism, Globalization, and the Environment
Effluents and Affluence Money, That’s What I Want! Globalization and the Environment Want Not, Waste Not? For Further Reading Chapter 4. Civic Politics and Social Power: Environmental Politics “On the Ground”
All Environmental Politics Are Local Why All Environmental Politics Are Local The Power of Social Power Social Power in Action For Further Reading Chapter 5. The National Origins of International Environmental Policies and Practices: “My Country Is in the World”
The State and the Environment International Environmental Regimes: The Standard Account and Some Caveats>br/> The Historical National Origins of Environmental Internationalism The Contemporary National Origins of Environmental (Inter)nationalism Tales of Privatization How International Are International Environmental Regimes? A Successful Case of Environmental Internationalism Are there International Environmental Politics? For Further Reading Chapter 6. Global Environmental Politics and You: “The World Is My Country”
Into the Streets! Markets Are Not Politics Toward an Environmental Ethic Toward an Environmental Praxis Global Environmental Politics from the Ground Up A Final Manifesto For Further Reading
Reviews "Lipschutz has written an exemplary text on the politics of the global environment. It combines intellectual rigor with comparative breadth, and theoretical sophistication with rich
illustrative case studies. Global Environmental Politics takes on in a compelling way the most
pressing issues in green politics: the relations between neoliberalism and the environment,
transnational civil society and environmental sustainability, globalization and green governance,
epistemology and green practice. It is a major contribution to the understanding of the
state of the environment in the 21st century and a powerful exhortation to critically rethink the
local-global politics of Nature. It should be widely used in courses across the social and environmental
sciences." - Michael Watts, University of California, Berkeley"Lipschutz provides an imaginative and sweeping critique of the concepts that underlie individual
decisions that have international and global environmental effects, and of the concepts
that underlie most analyses of policies intended to redress these circumstances. The strength
of the book is that it highlights the assumptions that go into common descriptions and
analyses of environmental problems. Basically, Lipschutz asks, ‘Why do bad environmental
things happen when good or indifferent people make decisions?’" - Peter Haas, University of Massachusetts, Amherst"Students and teachers alike will be grateful for the refreshing clarity and penetrating insight
this book brings to some of the most challenging issues of our time. Rare is the book that
can truly bridge theory and practice, simultaneously edifying and empowering its readers.
This book does both, constructing multiple bridges—between international relations and
green theory, between ethics and economics, between self and world—in a most accessible
and creative way. The author manages to delve into the subtleties of political economy, environmental
ethics, globalization, and social movement theory, integrating a wide swath of
theoretical literature into very practical analyses of such issues as climate change, watershed
restoration, and genetic modification. The result is one of the most innovative and comprehensive
books on global environmental politics ever published." - Karen Litfin, University of Washington
Bio(s)
Ronnie D. Lipschutz, University of California, Santa Cruz Ronnie D. Lipschutz is Professor of Politics at the University of California, Santa Cruz, where he teaches courses on foreign policy, international politics, global environmental politics, ecological philosophy, and Cold War film and fiction. He is the Associate Director of the Center for Global, International, and Regional Studies at UCSC and Chair of the Environmental Studies Section of the International Studies Association. Lipschutz has degrees in physics from the University of Texas-Austin and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and a Ph.D. from the Energy and Resources Group at U.C. Berkeley. Lipschutz is the author of, most recently, Global Civil Society and Global Environmental Governance--The Politics of Nature from Place to Planet (SUNY Press, 1996), After Authority--War, Peace, and Global Politics in the 21st Century (SUNY Press, 2000), and Film, Fiction, and the Cold War: Popular Culture and Foreign Policy During America's Half-Century (Rowman & Littlefield, 2001). He is editor of On Security (Columbia, 1995), co-editor (with Ken Conca) of The State and Social Power in Global Environmental Politics (Columbia, 1993), and co-editor (with Beverly Crawford) of The Myth of "Ethnic Conflict"--Politics, Economics, and "Cultural" Violence (International and Area Studies, UC-Berkeley, 1998).
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